This morning Diana and I attended a service at the Unity Fellowship Church in Chiawelo, Soweto, run by the charismatic Pastor Mukhuba and her husband Dr Mukhuba. This was at the invitation of one of their congregants, Paulette Nkosi, whom I met on Monday to talk about her media business which is poised for growth and needs a helping hand.
The church is facing closure by the City of Johannesburg on grounds it's operating illegally. After sending them a letter in April 2013 informing them their permit to operate the church, issued in 2008, was summarily terminated, the City has now served them with an eviction notice which the Mukhubas are fighting in court. The Mukhubas claim this is politically motivated, due to the outspoken criticism of the ANC issued from their pulpit which is not being taken lightly by the powers that be.
A place for ideas, discussion and suggestions for making South Africa a better place.
Sunday, 1 March 2015
Tuesday, 17 February 2015
In a spat with Jeremy Cronin over the causes of inequality
Jeremy Cronin, Deputy Secretary General of the SA Communist Party and Deputy Minister of Public Works, wrote a whinging piece in the Cape Times last week, attempting to characterise my colleague Geordin Hill-Lewis and me as Thatcherites who do not understand the causes of inequality. This is presumably because of the article I wrote (read it here), which was carried in the Sunday Independent two weeks ago, in which I described how Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan fashioned the Washington Consensus which gets Cronin's knickers in a twist.
He could not be more wrong! We understand it very well. Inequality in South Africa is caused mostly by the huge gulf between the employed and the unemployed which is itself due to weak economic growth.
Yesterday the Cape Times carried our rejoinder - here - where we set out our views.
You can make your mind up on who has the better arguments.
He could not be more wrong! We understand it very well. Inequality in South Africa is caused mostly by the huge gulf between the employed and the unemployed which is itself due to weak economic growth.
Yesterday the Cape Times carried our rejoinder - here - where we set out our views.
You can make your mind up on who has the better arguments.
Sunday, 15 February 2015
SONA 2015 aftermath and the parallel universe outside Parliament
On Friday morning South Africa woke up to the realisation that the national project of a new democracy based on defending the Constitution, the Bill of Rights and the rule of law against its enemies is in danger of imploding. If Karl Popper were alive today he would have added a new chapter to his book The Open Society and its Enemies. Following his identification of Plato, Hegel, Marx and their residue as the enemies of freedom, Popper would have found an equally dangerous enemy in Jacob Zuma, our President in name only. Thursday's State of the Nation in Parliament was the clearest evidence yet that Zuma and the network of cronies he's built around him will stop at nothing to cling to power, at the expense of institutions designed to protect us from oppression and rule by cleptocracy.
" Bring back the signal!"
The media, fellow MPs and numerous commentators have documented Thursday's outrageous scenes in the House of Assembly so I will not attempt to repeat them here. Suffice to say that from the moment the scrambling device was detected before the sitting began, to the DA's walkout and Speaker Mbete's calling Julius Malema a cockroach at an ANC rally yesterday, the foundations of South Africa's democracy were steadily and relentlessly attacked by forces within the ANC that sacrificed them beneath the defence, at all costs, of Zuma and his corrupt patronage network.
" Bring back the signal!"
The media, fellow MPs and numerous commentators have documented Thursday's outrageous scenes in the House of Assembly so I will not attempt to repeat them here. Suffice to say that from the moment the scrambling device was detected before the sitting began, to the DA's walkout and Speaker Mbete's calling Julius Malema a cockroach at an ANC rally yesterday, the foundations of South Africa's democracy were steadily and relentlessly attacked by forces within the ANC that sacrificed them beneath the defence, at all costs, of Zuma and his corrupt patronage network.
Thursday, 5 February 2015
Promoting opportunity, not envy: Opinion piece in The Star
Hot on the heals of my complaint to the Human Rights Commission regarding Minister Lindiwe Zulu's comments on the looting of foreign-run spaza shops in Soweto, my views on the broader issues are published in The Star newspaper this morning (Thursday 5th February).
Walking through my constituency in Soweto observing the damage done to property, local business and community relations by the recent looting of foreign-run spaza shops, it became clear that the causes were not immediately obvious, and the solutions hardly more so.
Tuesday, 3 February 2015
SAPA releases statement on my request to the SA Human Rights Commission to investigate Minister Lindiwe Zulu's comments on foreign traders
The SA Human Rights
Commission has received a request from the DA to investigate comments made by
Small Business Minister Lindiwe Zulu about foreigners, it said on Tuesday.
"We
are currently assessing the matter with a view to investigate," commission
spokesman Isaac Mangena said.
"The
assessment will tell us if we are the correct institution to deal with the
matter or not."
Monday, 2 February 2015
Press statement - DA calls on SAHRC to investigate Lindiwe Zulu’s state-sponsored xenophobia
Democratic Alliance press statement
by
Toby Chance MP
DA Shadow Minister of Small Business
Development
2 February 2015
Release: immediate
The DA will today lay a complaint
with the South African Human Rights Commission (SAHRC) regarding the recent
xenophobic comments made by the Minister of Small Business Development, Lindiwe
Zulu.
In arguably her most outrageous
public comment since becoming a minister eight months ago, Zulu said that
foreign business owners should share their business practices with locals if
they wanted to live and trade here without fear of disturbance or
violence.
Friday, 16 January 2015
ANC stuck in an ideology that’s crippling growth
This article features on page 15 of Friday's Cape Argus - click here to read it on the IOL website.
Driving back to Joburg from the coast on Saturday, my wife and I tuned in to coverage of the ANC’s 103rd birthday celebrations in Cape Town. It dominated SAfm programming for most of the day. As our journey progressed I realised my holiday was well and truly over and politics was once again foremost on my mind.
Driving back to Joburg from the coast on Saturday, my wife and I tuned in to coverage of the ANC’s 103rd birthday celebrations in Cape Town. It dominated SAfm programming for most of the day. As our journey progressed I realised my holiday was well and truly over and politics was once again foremost on my mind.
But contrary to our journey forward the
narrative from Cape Town, in particular President Zuma’s speech, was firmly stuck
in the past.
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